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Ministry of All the Talents

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
National unity government of the United Kingdom from February 1806 to March 1807
"Government of All the Talents" redirects here. For the term under Gordon Brown, seePremiership of Gordon Brown § "Government of All the Talents".
"Grenville coalition" redirects here; not to be confused withGrenville ministry.

A group of naked British Whig politicians, including three Grenvilles, Sheridan, St. Vincent, Moira, Temple, Erskine, Howick, Petty, Whitbread, Sheridan, Windham, and Tomline, Bishop of Lincoln, crossing the river Styx in a boat named the Broad Bottom Packet. Sidmouth's head emerges from the water next to the boat. The boat's torn sail has inscription "Catholic Emancipation" and the centre mast is crowned with the Prince of Wales feathers and motto "Ich Dien". On the far side the shades of Cromwell, Charles Fox and Robespierre wave to them. Overhead, on brooms, are the Three Fates; to the left a three-headed dog. Above the boat three birds soil the boat and politicians.
A caricature of the ministry's break-up:James Gillray'sCharon's Boat.—or—the Ghosts of "all the Talents" taking their last voyage (1807).Charles Grey, Lord Howick rows andJohn Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent steers.

TheMinistry of All the Talents was anational unity government in theUnited Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland formed byWilliam Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville, on his appointment as prime minister on 11 February 1806, following the death ofWilliam Pitt the Younger.[1][2]

History

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With the country remainingat war, Grenville aimed to form the strongest possible government and so included most leading politicians from almost all groupings, although some followers of the younger Pitt, led byGeorge Canning, refused to join.

The inclusion ofCharles James Fox surprised some as KingGeorge III had previously been very hostile to Fox, but the King's willingness to put aside past enmities for the sake of national unity encouraged many others to join or support the government as well. The ministry boasted a fairly progressive agenda, much of it inherited from Pitt.

The Ministry of All the Talents had comparatively little success, failing to bring the sought-after peace with France. In fact, the war continued for nearly another decade. It did, however,abolish the slave trade in Britain in 1807 before breaking up in 1807 over the question ofCatholic emancipation.

It was succeeded by theSecond Portland ministry, headed byWilliam Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland.

List of ministers

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Members of the Cabinet are inbold face.

Portrait of Lord Grenville byJohn Hoppner. Grenville, a former ally ofPitt the Younger, led the government during its thirteen months in office.
Portrait of Lord Moira byJoshua Reynolds. Moira represented the supporters of thePrince of Wales in the cabinet.
OfficeNameDate
First Lord of the Treasury
Leader of the House of Lords
William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville11 February 1806 –
 31 March 1807
Chancellor of the ExchequerLord Henry Petty11 February 1806 –
 31 March 1807
Joint Secretaries to the TreasuryNicholas VansittartFebruary 1806 –
 March 1807
John KingFebruary –
 July 1806
William Henry FremantleJuly 1806 –
 March 1807
Junior Lords of the TreasuryJohn Spencer, Viscount Althorp,
William Wickham
andJohn Courtenay
11 February 1806
Lord ChancellorThomas Erskine, 1st Baron ErskineFebruary 1806
Lord President of the CouncilWilliam Fitzwilliam, 4th Earl Fitzwilliam19 February 1806
Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth8 October 1806
Lord Privy SealHenry Addington, 1st Viscount SidmouthFebruary 1806
Henry Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland8 October 1806
Secretary of State for the Home DepartmentGeorge Spencer, 2nd Earl Spencer5 February 1806
Under-Secretary of State for the Home DepartmentCharles Williams-WynnFebruary 1806
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
Leader of the House of Commons
Charles James Fox7 February 1806 –
 13 September 1806
Charles Grey, Viscount Howick24 September 1806
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign AffairsGeorge Walpole
andSir Francis Vincent, 3rd Baronet
February 1806 –
 March 1807
Secretary of State for War and the ColoniesWilliam WindhamFebruary 1806
Under-Secretary of State for War and the ColoniesSir George Shee, 1st Baronet
andSir James Cockburn, 9th Baronet
February 1806 –
 March 1807
First Lord of the AdmiraltyCharles Grey[a]10 February 1806
Thomas Grenville29 September 1806
First Secretary to the AdmiraltyWilliam MarsdenContinued in office
Civil Lords of the AdmiraltySir Philip Stephens, 1st Baronet10 February –
 23 October 1806
Lord William Russell
andWilliam Edwardes, 2nd Baron Kensington
10 February 1806 –
 31 March 1807
William Frankland23 October 1806 –
 31 March 1807
President of the Board of TradeWilliam Eden, 1st Baron Auckland5 February 1806
Vice-President of the Board of Trade[b]Richard Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville, 3rd Earl Temple5 February 1806
President of the Board of ControlGilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 1st Baron Minto12 February 1806
Thomas Grenville16 July 1806
George Tierney1 October 1806
Secretary to the Board of ControlThomas Creevey14 February 1806
Chancellor of the Duchy of LancasterEdward Smith-Stanley, 12th Earl of Derby12 February 1806
Master-General of the OrdnanceFrancis Rawdon-Hastings, 2nd Earl of MoiraFebruary 1806
Lieutenant-General of the OrdnanceSirThomas TriggeContinued in office
Treasurer of the OrdnanceAlexander Davison20 February 1806
Surveyor-General of the OrdnanceJames Murray HaddenContinued in office
Clerk of the OrdnanceJohn Calcraft22 February 1806
Clerk of the Deliveries of the OrdnanceJames Lloyd12 March 1806
Storekeeper of the OrdnanceJohn McMahon22 February 1806
Treasurer of the NavyRichard Brinsley SheridanFebruary 1806
Secretary at WarRichard FitzPatrickFebruary 1806
Master of the MintLord Charles SpencerFebruary 1806
Charles BathurstOctober 1806
Paymaster of the ForcesRichard Temple-Nugent-Brydges-Chandos-Grenville, 3rd Earl Temple
andLord John Townshend
February 1806 –
 March 1807
Postmaster GeneralJohn Proby, 1st Earl of Carysfort
andRobert Hobart, 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire
February 1806 –
 March 1807
Minister without PortfolioWilliam Fitzwilliam, 4th Earl FitzwilliamOctober 1806 –
 March 1807
Lord Lieutenant of IrelandJohn Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford12 March 1806
Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond11 April 1807
Chief Secretary for IrelandWilliam ElliotFebruary 1806
Lord Chief Justice of the King's BenchEdward Law, 1st Baron EllenboroughContinued in office
Attorney GeneralSirArthur Piggott12 February 1806
Solicitor GeneralSirSamuel Romilly12 February 1806
Judge Advocate GeneralNathaniel Bond8 March 1806
Lord AdvocateHenry ErskineFebruary 1806
Solicitor General for ScotlandJohn ClerkFebruary 1806
Attorney General for IrelandWilliam PlunketContinued in office
Solicitor General for IrelandCharles Kendal BusheContinued in office
Lord Steward of the HouseholdHeneage Finch, 4th Earl of AylesfordContinued in office
Treasurer of the HouseholdCharles Bennet, Baron Ossulston12 February 1806
Comptroller of the HouseholdLord George ThynneContinued in office
Lord Chamberlain of the HouseholdGeorge Legge, 3rd Earl of DartmouthContinued in office
Vice-Chamberlain of the HouseholdLord John ThynneContinued in office
Master of the HorseHenry Herbert, 1st Earl of Carnarvon8 February 1806
Master of the BuckhoundsWilliam Keppel, 4th Earl of Albemarle12 February 1806
Captain of the Gentlemen PensionersSt Andrew St John, 14th Baron St John of Bletso12 February 1806
Captain of the Yeomen of the GuardGeorge Parker, 4th Earl of MacclesfieldContinued in office
Notes
  1. ^Styled Viscount Howick from 11 April 1806.
  2. ^Earl Temple concurrently served asPaymaster of the Forces andVice-President of the Board of Trade.

Other uses of the term

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The term has since been used in politics to describe an administration with members from more than one party or even a non-coalition government that enjoys cross-party support due to gifted and/or non-partisan members. Examples include thecoalition government which led the United Kingdom through theSecond World War and theCanadian government that won the1896 election.[3] InIreland, theGovernment of the 20th Dáil (aFine GaelLabour coalition that was in office between 1973 and 1977) was widely called the "cabinet of all the talents."[4][5][6]

See also

[edit]

References

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  1. ^Harvey, A.D. (1972). "The Ministry of All the Talents: The Whigs in Office, February 1806 to March 1807".Historical Journal.15 (4):619–648.doi:10.1017/S0018246X00003484.JSTOR 2638036.
  2. ^"Lord William Wyndham Grenville". Archived fromthe original on 13 August 2009 – via DukesOfBuckingham.org.uk.
  3. ^John Holland Rose (1929).The Cambridge history of the British Empire: The Growth of the new Empire(Google books).Cambridge University Press. p. 511.
  4. ^"40 years on, three 'talents' remain".independent. 6 October 2017.
  5. ^Burns, John."Cosgrave's 'no nonsense' farewell" – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
  6. ^"Liam Cosgrave 1920-2017". 1 December 2017.
Preceded byGovernment of the United Kingdom
1806–1807
Succeeded by
 Great Britain
(1707–1801)
HM Government of the United Kingdom's Royal Coat of Arms
 UK (GB and Ire)
(1801–1922)
 UK (GB and NI)
(1922–present)
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